Category Archives: Regulations and regulators

Builders and Consumers Resist Greener Homes

A Reuters story, “U.S. struggles to build green homes,” describes Americans’ deep seated resistance to doing the right thing, energy-wise: Regardless of the sales pitch, energy efficiency is an opportunity that Americans shun…. While gas-guzzling vehicles draw the most criticism, homes and businesses consume even more energy — 40 percent of the U.S. total in […]

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On Regulating Hedge Funds

Mark Thoma on Economist’s View, sums up his view in his headline, “Kenneth Rogoff: German Leaders Are Right About Hedge Fund Transparency and Regulation“. Rogoff takes issue with Paulson’s dismissal of the idea of making hedge funds more accountable. It’s odd that Paulson even thinks he had a vote on this issue, since the Treasury […]

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Fuel Efficiency Standards Vs. Gas Tax

A great post, “CAFE Standards,” from James Hamilton at Econbrowser on how fuel efficiency standards (technically, corporate average fuel efficiency, or CAFE) work and their effects in practice. He in turn cites research by Marc Jacobsen, an economics PhD at Stanford. I found it useful to understand a bit more about how these standards are […]

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Banks Trying to Stave Off Credit Card Regulation

Louis the XIV’s finance minister, Jean-Baptiste Colbert once described the art of taxation as plucking the maximum amount of feathers from the goose with the least amount of hissing. Credit card companies have managed to do the tax man one better. They don’t care what the goose does, as long as they get their feathers. […]

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Michael Panzer on the Return of Pollyanna

Ah, a man after our own heart (we too have written about Pollyanna markets and complacency about risk). In a nicely understated piece at Seeking Alpha, “Short-Lived Economic Pessimism: Pollyanna is Back – With a Vengeance,” Michael Panzer writes about how various regulators have been perternaturally cheerful this week.The piece is very much worth reading […]

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Possible Restrictions on Payday Lending

A Wall Street Journal story, “Payday Lenders Strike a Defensive Pose,” discussed the growing Congressional interest in restricting payday lending, and the attempts by the industry to clean up its act around the margin. By any standard, payday lending is predatory lending. Typical terms are $15 for every $100 borrowed for two weeks. That’s 390% […]

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Study Recommends Carbon Tax over "Cap and Trade"

As we’ve noted, Wall Street firms have been investing in various means of profiting from likely future regulation of carbon emissions, particularly carbon trading. A study by Dr. Robert Shapiro, undersecretary of Commerce in the Clinton Administration (which we found thanks to Greg Mankiw’s blog), concludes that carbon taxes would be more effective than emissions […]

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Expand Sarbox?

This post on Thomas Palley’s blog, which I found thanks to Mark Thoma’s Economist’s View, argues cogently for an expansion, rather than a rollback, of Sarbanes-Oxley, the corporate governance reforms implemented in 2002 in the wake of big corporate accounting scandals, such as Enron and WorldCom. Palley, an economist, observes that Sarbox has not stopped […]

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Cancer Link to Genetically Modified Potatoes?

Before we go any further with this item, in which rats in a study developed cancer from consuming genetically modified potatoes, it’s important to note that this was one study and the study was “badly flawed”. Half the rats died (which half?) and the results were based only on the survivors. But this item post-worthy […]

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Climate Change, Species Loss, and the WTO

A reader comment on Angry Bear on the climate change and environmental degradation was sufficiently articulate and well argued to be featured as a separate post. The writer Stormy makes a number of important points: 1. The IPCC Report is actually conservative; it doesn’t touch the issue of species die-off, already occurring at alarming levels […]

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Perverse Effects of Deregulation of Energy Markets

This informative commentary in today’s Financial Times, by Jerome Guillet, an investment banker specializing in the energy sector, makes the observation that the energy projects that get built are the ones that are cheapest to get financed, but in the end, are often not the cheapest to operate. Utilities, which can obtain government guaranteed financing, […]

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The Journal Beats the Financial Times for a Change, on the Frothy Chinese Stock Market

We have been hard on the Journal for its tendency to politicize news coverage and omit stories that point to systemic financial risk. So we would like to give credit to the Journal when credit is due. This morning, the Wall Street Journal had a first page story on the stock market mania in China, […]

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